This proceeding arises out of an action for damages for the alleged wrongful death of one Robert Over-street while a patient at the Butte County Hospital. The first count of the complaint charged negligence in the treatment of decedent. The second count charged that the county failed to provide adequate facilities, and the third count charged that there was a dangerous and defective condition of public property in that there was no suitable oxygen tent available in the hospital. The county’s demurrer to the complaint was overruled, and it thereupon applied to this court for a writ of prohibition to prevent the respondent court from proceeding any further in said action.
The trial court in overruling the demurrer predicated
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its order entirely upon the premises that: The allegations of the complaint that the hospital is operated by the county as a proprietary business for compensation equal to or in excess of the cost of care provided and that the decedent entered the hospital as a paying patient will sustain a cause of action. Thus the sole question for determination by this court is whether the so-called doctrine of sovereign immunity attaches as a matter of law to the situation presented by the admitted allegations of the complaint. The precise question raised in the present proceeding was before this court in the recent case of
Durst
v.
County of Colusa,
“ Much as we may deplore a rule of law which deprives the indigent, who are least able to bear the loss, along with the wealthy, if they are admitted to a county hospital as patients, of recourse against the county for tortious injuries therein received, an intermediate appellate court must accept the settled law as it finds it.”
(Latham
v.
Santa Clara County Hospital,
Let the writ issue.
Van Dyke, P. J., and Schottky, J., concurred.
The petition of the real parties in interest for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied April 20,1960. Traynor, J., and Peters, J., were of the opinion that the petition should be granted.
